Mori was a little girl with big brown eyes. She lived with her parents in a beautiful coconut grove, next to a small blue lake. Every morning, she balanced a big empty basket on her head as she walked down to the lake. Her mother followed with the laundry and her father brought the big fishing net. Her mother washed the clothes on a stone next to the lake, while her father went fishing.

He dragged the net ashore, and they collected the fish in a big basket. Sometimes a turtle got stuck in the net but Mori always hurried to the rescue. One sunny morning, while fishing with her father, Mori said: “If we catch so many fish, one day there won’t be any left!” Her mother laughed and sent her off to school.

In the shade of the trees, Mori’s mother fell into an uneasy sleep. She dreamt of a lake with no fish, while the wind in the palm leaves whispered: “The waters and the land have always taken care of your family, but you have to take care of them in return.” She awoke with tears in her eyes, for she didn’t know how to bring Mori up without selling enough fish. All afternoon she sat,

That night Mori heard her parents whispering, and the oil lamp burned deep into the night. The next morning, her father gave her a smaller basket. “How can we carry all the fish in this little basket?” Mori asked.

“We will only take as many fish as can fit into this basket,” he replied. Mori was puzzled. Coming back from school, she was thrilled to find her mother making soap and oil from the coconuts. Mori swiftly climbed up a tree to get more coconuts, but her mother cautioned, “Don’t pluck them, we must only use what the tree gives us.” Her father added: “We have taken only fallen coconuts for these things. Look, we even made this soap with a jasmine flower inside!”

From that day, the family made brooms from the palm leaves and wove mats from coconut fibre. They took soap, oil and only a small amount of fish to the market. When Mori grew older, she loved to carve tiny turtles out of coconut shells and always wore one around her neck.